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The history of Pilates — A fitness revolution that started 70 years ago

The beginnings: Joseph Pilates
In 1923, German-born Joseph Pilates brought his unique
method of physical and mental conditioning to the United States. Pilates
had been asthmatic as a child, motivating him to improve his strength
and physique. His study of yoga and the martial arts, and his work with
physicians and his wife Clara (a nurse), led to the development of his
conditioning system. More than 70 years later, his techniques became the
cornerstone of the Polestar Pilates Method.
The dancer's workout
Pilates' studio in New York City attracted a variety of
athletes and fitness enthusiasts, but it was the professional dance community
that most strongly embraced and later improved his techniques. Dance legends
such as Ruth St. Denis, Ted Shawn, Martha Graham, George Balanchine and
Jerome Robbins studied under Pilates and taught the concepts to their
students. Pilates' techniques became an integral part of dance conditioning.
The 1960s: the movement spreads
In the 1960s, Pilates' students began to open their own
conditioning studios. The first generation of instructors combined Pilates'
principles with their own interpretations and knowledge gathered from
others. In 1967, the movement took an explosive leap forward when Ron
Fletcher moved to Los Angeles. Fletcher, a dancer, possessed deep knowledge
of the method and added many of his own important contributions. Fletcher's
presence and influence produced a steady stream of instructors who carried
the principles throughout California, Texas, and Colorado and, ultimately,
the world. Today, the vast majority of instructors can trace their origins
to Fletcher's Los Angeles studio. In New York City and in many international
communities, growth of the method can be traced to Corrolla Trier, Kathy
Stanford-Grant, Eve Gentry, Romana Kryzanowska and other original students
of Joseph Pilates.
Improvements from the medical community
In 1984, the Center for Sports Medicine at Saint Francis
Memorial Hospital, San Francisco, began to use some Pilates' concepts
to rehabilitate and condition dancers and athletes. Physicians and therapists
at the hospital created a new system, combining Pilates' principles with
current practices, standards and research in dance and sports medicine.
The system developed at Saint Francis is the heart of the Polestar Pilates Method. Work at Saint Francis
became recognised internationally, bringing it to the attention of mainstream
health and fitness communities. Soon other hospitals, universities, and
physical therapists started their own programmes.
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